The Jade Rabbit
Folklore
In the Buddhist Śaśajâtaka (Jataka Tale 316), a monkey, an otter, a jackal, and a rabbit resolved to practice charity on the day of the full moon (Uposatha), believing a demonstration of great virtue would earn a great reward.
When
an old man begged for food, the monkey gathered fruits from the trees
and the otter collected fish, while the jackal wrongfully pilfered a
lizard and a pot of milk-curd. The rabbit, who knew only how to gather
grass, instead offered its own body, throwing itself into a fire the man
had built. The rabbit, however, was not burnt. The old man revealed
himself to be Śakra and,
touched by the rabbit's virtue, drew the likeness of the rabbit on the
moon for all to see. It is said the lunar image is still draped in the
smoke that rose when the rabbit cast itself into the fire.
A version of this story can be found in the Japanese anthology Konjaku Monogatarishū, where the rabbit's companions are a fox and a monkey.
Similar legends occur in Mexican folklore, where people also identified the markings on the moon as a rabbit. According to an Aztec legend, the godQuetzalcoatl,
then living on Earth as a man, started on a journey and, after walking
for a long time, became hungry and tired. With no food or water around,
he thought he would die. Then a rabbit grazing nearby offered herself as
food to save his life. Quetzalcoatl, moved by the rabbit's noble
offering, elevated her to the moon, then lowered her back to Earth and
told her, "You may be just a rabbit, but everyone will remember you;
there is your image in light, for all people and for all times."
Another Mesoamerican legend tells of the brave and noble sacrifice of Nanahuatzin during the creation of the fifth sun. Humble Nanahuatzin sacrificed himself in fire to become the new sun, but the wealthy god Tecciztecatl hesitated
four times before he finally set himself alight to become the moon. Due
to Tecciztecatl's cowardice, the gods felt that the moon should not be
as bright as the sun, so one of the gods threw a rabbit at his face to
diminish his light. It is also said that Tecciztecatl was in the form of
a rabbit when he sacrificed himself to become the moon, casting his
shadow there.
A Native American (Cree)
legend tells a different variation, about a young rabbit who wished to
ride the moon. Only the crane was willing to take him. The trip
stretched Crane's
legs as the heavy rabbit held them tightly, leaving them elongated as
crane's legs are now. When they reached the moon Rabbit touched Crane's
head with a bleeding paw, leaving the red mark cranes wear to this day.
According to the legend, Rabbit still rides the moon to this day.
History
An early mention that there is a rabbit on the moon appears in the Chu Ci, a Western Han anthology of Chinese poems from the Warring States period, which notes that along with a toad, there is a rabbit on the moon who constantly pounds herbs for the immortals. This notion is supported by later texts, including the Imperial Readings of the Taiping Era encyclopedia of the Song Dynasty. Han Dynasty poets call the rabbit on the moon the "Jade Rabbit" (玉兔) or the "Gold Rabbit" (金兔), and these phrases were often used in place of the word for the moon. A famous poet of the Tang Dynasty period, Li Bai, relates how: "The rabbit in the moon pounds the medicine in vain" in his poem "The Old Dust."
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